03. Journals
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These are journal articles published in World Bank journals as well as externally by World Bank authors.
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Publication Social Protection amid a Crisis: New Evidence from South Africa’s Older Person’s Grant(Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank, 2023-11-23) Alloush, Mo; Bloem, Jeffrey R.; Malacarne, J. G.This study estimates the effects of South Africa’s Older Person’s Grant on well-being amid the COVID-19 pandemic. With household-level data collected before and during the pandemic, it leverages the age-eligibility threshold of the grant to estimate its effects on households in both periods. Prior to the pandemic, this study finds that grant receipt substantially improves economic well-being and decreases adult hunger at the household level. During the first 18 months of the pandemic, this study finds larger effects on both economic well-being and hunger than prior to the pandemic. Recipient households were less likely to report running out of money for food and hunger among either adults or children. These results, which are stronger when pandemic-related lockdown policies are in place and for more vulnerable households, provide critical insight into the effectiveness of one of the world’s most well-known cash-transfer programs during a massive global health crisis.Publication The Lasting Labor-Market Effects of Cash Transfers: Evidence from South Africa’s Child Support Grant(Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank, 2022-09-16) Tondini, AlessandroCan unconditional cash transfers have long-term benefits for women’s employment in developing countries This study exploits discontinuous exposure to the South African Child Support Grant for mothers whose children were born one year apart to identify the short- and long-term effects of a positive income shock of roughly $400 ($650 PPP in 2010). In the short term, there is a considerable increase in the probability of being active and looking for a job. Five years after receiving the transfer, mothers who benefited for one year are as likely to be employed as those who never received it; the type of occupation is also similar, other than a small decrease in work in the agricultural sector. Overall, the grant appears to facilitate job search for single mothers in the presence of high search costs, but does not significantly change job prospects.